The perspective of tolerance in the context of youth civic attitude[#484460]-611274
International Journal on Lifelong Education and Leadership (2018), 4(2) 3
In the multicultural society, tolerance is an essential precondition for intercultural cooperation and
peacekeeping. The research carried out by European Commission in 2015 (
Special Eurobarometer 437 – Discrimination in the EU in 2015 ) highlights that two out of three Europeans have friends with different
religions or beliefs (73% of respondents) (total number of respondents 27,718), but three out of five
Europeans have friends with different ethnic origins (67% of respondents). The most widespread forms of
discrimination in the European Union are ethnic origin - 64%, sexual orientation - 58%, and attitudes
towards transgendered persons - 56% (European Commission, 2015).
In the process of tolerance formation, personal development is promoted and person`s emotional
intelligence is developed. It must be admitted that individual tolerance criteria that promote active civic
position and individual's psychological readiness to be tolerant and create positive interactions when a
person comes into contact with the different, are different: (I) stability of personality; (II) empathy - an
adequate understanding of what is happening in the inner world of another person; (III) thinking
divergence - the ability to deal with common tasks in an unusual way; (IV) elasticity of behavioral patterns
- the ability to change the tactics depending on the situation; (V) social activity - an individual activity for
building constructive relationships in society (Osis, Ose, 2006).
The acquisition of civic education at school boosts social capital (Heggart, 2015), promotes capacity of
democracy (Martens, Gainous, 2012), promotes collective action (Kanter, Schneider, 2013) and the
preparedness of schoolchildren for multicultural democracy (Macedo, 2003), creating tolerant student
attitudes in the existing pluralism (Wolf, Macedo, 2004) and understanding of democratic values (Kuran,
2014). In a complex and multi-faceted pedagogical process, the implementation of civic education cannot
be disconnected from the existing changing reality and the content of the common education: "the process
of learning has to work with the realities, then it will be possible to educate people to be people" (Šteiners,
2007, p. 42). As the educator D. Prets stresses, "education is not the process of filling the vacuum or
correcting the deficiencies, but providing the conditions in which the opportunities included in a person
develop in their entirety. Learning, on the other hand, is a moral achievement when a person chooses
altruism instead of self-interest, reconciliation rather than conflict, excellence rather than mediocrity,
work rather than laziness, justice rather than repression" (Prets, 2000, p. 21, p. 36). One of the aims of
civic education is to create a civically active person's position to take the responsibility for his/her life and
the life of others. Promoting tolerance is important pedagogical value in the process of acquisition of civic
education, because tolerance is a prerequisite for people's mutual understanding (Ильин, 2009). It is the
ability of a person to understand different looking for peaceful resolution of conflicts, reducing and
eliminating various barriers.
The quality of the content and acquisition of civic education directly affects the quality of life of each
person and society. Personality traits such as self-confidence, ability to influence one's destiny, social and
civic competence, obligation consciousness, tolerance, altruism and empathy are no less important than
cognitive abilities. Cultural education, as described by the educational researcher T. Erlih, is a combination
of knowledge, skills, values and motivation that allows the quality of society to be promoted, while in the
center of civic education there is a tolerant, moral and civic citizen (Ehrlich, 2000). Thus, civic education
can be characterized, among other things, as one of the preconditions for the development of tolerant
attitude of young people towards themselves, their peers and the environment.
The knowledge and experience of world history allows us to be aware of the possible consequences of
intolerance, which has become an extremeness of national chauvinism, which served as one of the causes
for both the First World War and the Second World War. In order to prevent and mitigate possible
geopolitical provocations of the 21st century and ensure the coexistence of different people, thinking
about common future challenges and finding common elements in the common history, more attention
needs to be paid to the issues of tolerance in school education. It should be noted that in the preamble of
tolerance of The United Nations Organization for Education, Science and Culture (
UNESCO ), the most
effective means of promoting tolerance and reducing intolerance is education (UNESCO, 1995).